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Reducing Hazardous Alcohol Use and Optimizing Treatment as Prevention Among Men Living With HIV in Risk Environments
Sponsor: San Diego State University
Summary
The investigators developed the Kisoboka ("It is possible") Intervention to address limitations of existing evidence-based interventions to optimize treatment as prevention among men living with HIV who drink alcohol at hazardous levels in "risk environments" such as fishing communities through reductions in hazardous alcohol use, improved adherence to HIV medications and achieving undetectable HIV viral loads. Social and structural determinants unique to fishing communities interact to create a risk environment where hazardous drinking impedes adherence to HIV medications among men living with HIV, including prevalent social norms of drinking, drinking as a way of experiencing "reward" and connecting with others (e.g. in the context of transactional sex), stressful work conditions, a "live for today" outlook, and a cash-based economy with no traditional savings infrastructure leading to ease of daily expenditure on drinking and sex work. These social and environmental conditions result in high levels of alcohol misuse and HIV risk, poor HIV outcomes, and exacerbation of HIV-associated wellness comorbidities such as poor mental and subjective physical health and food insecurity. The goal of this study is to learn if the intervention called Kisoboka works to help men in fishing communities reduce hazardous alcohol use, be better able to take the participants HIV medication as prescribed, and have undetectable HIV viral loads. The investigators will compare the Kisoboka intervention to a brief alcohol screening, adherence counseling, and referrals, and to components of the Kisoboka intervention. Participants will attend intervention counseling sessions according to the study arm to which the participants are randomly assigned. The number of sessions ranges from 1 to 6 over 1 to 16 weeks and are individual only or both individual and group sessions.
Official title: Kisoboka: Reducing Hazardous Alcohol Use and Optimizing Treatment as Prevention Among Men Living With HIV in Risk Environments
Key Details
Gender
MALE
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
716
Start Date
2025-06-16
Completion Date
2029-02
Last Updated
2025-06-17
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Kisoboka
Intervention activities: Financial goal setting (developing delayed rewards), Text message reminders of savings goals (increase salience of delayed rewards), Substance-free activities (alternative reinforcers), Mobile money savings and work payments (constraints on buying alcohol), Social support \& role models for financial goals and substance-free activities (delayed rewards, alternative reinforcers), Financial literacy, Develop motivation \& confidence for change, Goal setting for alcohol reduction \& ART adherence, Alcohol harms \& defining low risk drinking Discuss challenges to change and maintain alcohol risk reduction and improved adherence, Developing \& reinforcing discrepancy between savings/life goals and drinking/poor adherence, Developing discrepancy activity: goals for savings and healthy living and weekly, monthly, yearly spending on alcohol Self-monitoring of savings \& spending Text message reminders to reinforce discrepancy between unhealthy behavior \& goals
Behavioral Economics
Intervention activities: Financial goal setting (developing delayed rewards), Text message reminders of savings goals (increase salience of delayed rewards), Substance free activities (alternative reinforcers), Mobile money savings and work payments (constraints on buying alcohol/ decrease reward value of alcohol), Social support \& role models for financial goals and substance free activities (delayed rewards, alternative reinforcers), Financial literacy
Motivational Interviewing
Intervention activities: Develop motivation and confidence for change, Specific goal setting for alcohol reduction and ART adherence, Alcohol harms \& defining low risk drinking, Discuss challenges to change and to maintain alcohol risk reduction and improved adherence/care engagement
Screening and Referral
Brief feedback on their Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) score per the AUDIT brief intervention manual, a referral for alcohol counseling, and brief guidance on the importance of HIV care engagement and adherence following the Ugandan Ministry of Health protocol. A referral coupon with details of the clinic name and location will be provided to each participant and participants will be asked to submit the referral note to the "alcohol and/or HIV counselor".
Locations (1)
Makerere University Walter Reed Program
Kampala, Uganda